Group therapy

I went to my local Diabetes UK meeting last night. I tend to do most of my diabetes “you show me yours I’ll show you mine” activity online nowadays, but I do venture out into the real world occasionally. I pick my meetings carefully. I find the alcohol intake needed to offset the depression caused by any talk on the diabetic foot that involves photos of festering toes is too damaging to my liver for me to risk. But last night the speaker was a former GP. I admit, that phrase rings alarm bells. GP’s with brownie badges in diabetes can be scary. But this one is pancreatically challenged and a good speaker too, so I went along.

It was a genuinely interesting few hours. A gentle, entertaining meander through the rollercoaster of blood glucose control. He successfully navigated the tightrope of doom and avoided a riot by cleverly making Type 1s and Type 2s both feel like he was talking more about their condition than the other one. I picked up some new ideas on how to approach stuff. And it reinforced some of the things I’ve done naturally over the years but have never heard anyone else talk about – like his mantra of sort the hypos first. If you’re having rollercoaster issues, prioritise stopping the lows rather than the highs. Because a lot of the highs are caused by the rebound from the lows. I’ve always done it, but never even thought to articulate it.

But the best bit for me was the conversation. I spoke to people who’d lived with diabetes for years. I reminisced about holidays with a South African ex pat, and trying to convince one chap that he should apply to be a trustee of Diabetes UK because his passion and drive around diabetes are just what they need. But the bit that really stood out to me was spending some time talking to a young woman who was new to playing at being a pancreas. A three-way conversation about blood glucose results, what insulin she was using and what care she was getting gave her enough info to spot some issues and know how to go about fixing them. I think I got as much out of that conversation as she did. My therapy quota is complete for another week.

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About Alison

Diagnosed with Type One in 1983 at the age of four, Alison's been at this for a while now. She uses Humalog in a combined insulin pump and continuous glucose monitoring system and any blood glucose meter as long as it takes five seconds or less.

5 thoughts on “Group therapy”

My local DUK meeting is most emphatically about fundraising, although they do have speakers and there’s tea (and a raffle) at the end every month. Everyone but me and perhaps one or two others is over 60. My last meeting is described in the first paragraph here. I’m glad to hear they’re not all like that.

We had the obligatory tea and raffle, but I can confirm that there was representation from twentysomethings and thirtysomethings and some excellent questions from people in the audience. I came away quite invigorated. Like your experience, the room was hot. I guess someone must think broken pancreases need to be kept just below boiling temperature at all times.

Diabetes meet ups are the tops! I’ve learnt more in an hour with another diabetic than I have with a DSN in a day (and a month with a GP). Given the success of the Shoot Up nights out, if there aren’t any groups near you that fit the bill then set up your own – it’s dead easy!

At the diabetes conference thing I go to once a year, I love it when the Old Salts who’ve had diabetes for 103 years go to work on some poor young graduate who tries to tell them they’re managing their diabetes incorrectly. What fun!